Custody schedule generator

50/50 Custody Schedule: Examples, Calendar & Free Generator

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Compare the most common 50/50 parenting schedules — 2-2-3, 2-2-5-5, 3-4-4-3, 5-2-2-5, and week-on/week-off — then generate a printable custody calendar.

Schedule summary

A 50/50 custody schedule gives each parent roughly equal parenting time. The most common options are 2-2-3, 2-2-5-5, 3-4-4-3, 5-2-2-5, and week-on/week-off.

Best for: parents comparing equal parenting time schedules before generating a printable 50/50 custody calendar.

Included

Free custody calendar generatorPrintable schedule previewCalculate overnight splitNo account required

Planning notes

Distance mattersExchange routine mattersHolidays can shift totalsNot legal advice

Editorial review

CustodyBuilder Editorial Team

Reviewed for clarity, schedule comparison logic, and practical usefulness by the CustodyBuilder Editorial Team.

Author

CustodyBuilder Editorial Team

Parenting time calendar and custody schedule planning team

CustodyBuilder creates plain-English schedule guides and calendar tools for parents comparing overnights, printable calendars, and parenting plan options.

Fact-checked:

Legal review: Not attorney-reviewed. This page is educational information, not legal advice or a court order.

Use this guide for planning conversations. Custody laws, child support rules, and court practices vary by state.

Quick answer

A 50/50 custody schedule gives each parent roughly equal parenting time. The most common options are 2-2-3, 2-2-5-5, 3-4-4-3, 5-2-2-5, and week-on/week-off. For younger children, 2-2-3 often works better because it avoids long gaps. For school-age children, 2-2-5-5 is often easier. For teenagers, week-on/week-off can work if both homes are stable.

Schedule builder

Create a parenting calendar

Preview dates, check overnight estimates, and save a PDF when the schedule is ready to discuss.

These names are calendar labels only.

Preview real dates Check overnight estimates Export when ready

Save your calendar

PDFs are for planning and discussion.

Parenting calendar preview

June 2026

Based on your selected start date.

Parent A Parent B
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30

Parent A

Overnight estimate

58%

7 overnights

Parent B

Overnight estimate

42%

5 overnights

Annual estimate shown when available.

Share calendar

Shares the schedule, start date, and parent labels.

Overnight estimate only.

At a glance

50/50 custody schedule summary

Primary intent Choose, generate, print, and compare a 50/50 custody schedule
Typical annual split About 182-183 overnights per parent per year
Common schedules 2-2-3, 2-2-5-5, 3-4-4-3, 5-2-2-5, week-on/week-off
Best young-child option 2-2-3 or 2-2-5-5 when exchanges are calm and nearby
Best school-age option 2-2-5-5 when weekday routines need to repeat clearly
Lowest-exchange option Week-on/week-off, usually best for older children and teenagers
Printable output Monthly calendar, yearly PDF, color-coded parent days, and overnight estimate
Next planning step Add holidays, school breaks, transportation, and exchange rules to a parenting plan

What is a 50/50 custody schedule?

A 50/50 custody schedule, also called a 50/50 parenting schedule, shared custody schedule, joint custody schedule, or equal parenting time schedule, is a calendar pattern that keeps parenting time roughly balanced between two homes.

The best 50/50 custody schedule is not always the neatest-looking calendar. It is the rotation that a child can follow consistently around school, sleep, activities, distance between homes, parent work schedules, and exchange stress.

Use the generator above to test real start dates, rename Parent A and Parent B, calculate the overnight split, print a monthly preview, or save a PDF. Then compare the detailed guides for 2-2-3, 2-2-5-5, 5-2-2-5, 3-4-4-3, and week-on/week-off.

Printable schedule

Generate a printable 50/50 custody calendar

Choose a schedule pattern, pick a start date, rename Parent A and Parent B, then print your calendar or save it for later.

Monthly calendar

Available

Preview a color-coded month with Parent A and Parent B days before printing.

Open this option

Yearly PDF

Available

Save a longer planning view after choosing the 50/50 rotation and start date.

Open this option

Saved schedules

Coming soon

Save this schedule to an account and return to it later.

Printable 50/50 custody calendar50/50 custody calendar PDFMonthly calendarYearly calendarColor-coded parent daysHoliday notes

Overnight calculator

50/50 custody overnight calculator

True 50/50 parenting time usually means each parent has about 182-183 overnights per year. A repeating two-week schedule may look exactly equal, but holidays, school breaks, vacations, and make-up time can shift the annual total.

After you generate a calendar, use the calculator tools to check the full-year parenting time percentage before relying on the schedule for planning conversations.

Best fit

When 50/50 custody usually works best

50/50 custody usually works best when the child can move between two stable homes without school disruption, long commutes, or repeated conflict around exchanges.

Parents live reasonably close

Both homes can support school, activities, friends, medical care, and ordinary routines without long drives.

School commute is manageable

The child can get to school on time from either home without rushed mornings or missed activities.

Both homes are stable

Each home can handle bedtime, meals, homework, supplies, medication, and supervision during its scheduled time.

Exchange routine is consistent

Parents can follow the same pickup time, location, transportation rule, and backup plan.

The child can handle transitions

The schedule gives the child enough emotional reset time after each move between homes.

Watch-outs

When 50/50 custody may not work well

Equal parenting time should not be forced when the calendar creates repeated school problems, unsafe exchanges, unstable supervision, or transition stress for the child.

Long distance between homes

A schedule can be equal on paper but too hard if one home cannot support school-week mornings and activities.

High-conflict exchanges

Frequent handoffs can expose the child to more tension unless exchanges happen through school or another neutral structure.

Unsafe or unstable home environment

Safety, supervision, housing stability, substance use, domestic violence, or medical concerns require local professional guidance.

Infant or toddler separation needs

Very young children may need shorter separations, more frequent contact, or a phased schedule rather than long blocks.

Unpredictable work schedules

Rotating shifts, travel, call-ins, or last-minute overtime can make a standard equal-time rotation unreliable.

Printable calendar

Printable 50/50 custody calendar

A printable 50/50 custody calendar helps parents see the actual month, not just the schedule name. CustodyBuilder can generate a monthly calendar, yearly calendar, and 50/50 custody calendar PDF with color-coded parent days.

Use the printable view for planning conversations, mediation prep, school-year organization, and holiday notes. Add holiday rules separately because Thanksgiving, winter break, spring break, summer vacation, birthdays, and parent holidays can override the regular 50/50 rotation.

Monthly calendar

Good for seeing the next school month, activities, exchanges, and short-term planning.

Yearly calendar PDF

Better for checking annual overnights, vacations, holidays, and the full parenting time pattern.

Color-coded parent days

Parent A and Parent B days are easier to scan before printing or discussing the plan.

Educational quiz

Find Your Best 50/50 Schedule

Answer a few practical questions to see which custody schedule may be worth comparing first. Nothing is saved, submitted, or collected.

This quiz is educational only and does not provide legal advice. The right schedule depends on your child, your parenting plan, and any court orders or local rules that apply.

Schedule fit check

Step 1 of 6

Child age

2-2-5-5 may be a good starting point.

Nearby homes, equal-time goals, predictable routines, and manageable transitions make 2-2-5-5 worth comparing first.

Best 50/50 schedule by age

Age does not decide custody by itself, but it changes how children experience separations, exchanges, school routines, and time away from each home.

Age Recommended 50/50 schedule Why Age guide
Toddlers 2-2-3 or 2-2-5-5 Shorter gaps can help, but only when exchanges are calm and homes are close. Read age guide
Preschool 2-2-3 or 3-4-4-3 Preschoolers may still need frequent contact while slowly tolerating longer blocks. Read age guide
Elementary school 2-2-5-5 Fixed weekdays help with homework, backpacks, reading logs, lunches, and activities. Read age guide
Middle school 5-2-2-5 or week-on/week-off Older children often need fewer handoffs around activities, devices, and school responsibilities. Read age guide
Teenagers Week-on/week-off Teens often do better with a simpler calendar if both homes can support a full week. Read age guide

What to define before using a 50/50 parenting schedule

The schedule name is only the start. A workable 50/50 parenting schedule also needs written rules for school supplies, exchanges, holidays, transportation, missed time, and schedule changes.

Use the calendar first, then turn the pattern into practical language with a <a href="/parenting-plan-template/" class="text-accent underline decoration-line underline-offset-4 hover:text-primary">parenting plan template</a>.

Exact exchange time and location
Who drives or whether exchanges happen at school
How backpacks, medicine, devices, uniforms, and sports gear move
What happens when school is closed or a child is sick
How holidays override the regular 50/50 rotation
How parents request changes or make up missed time

Compare common 50/50 custody schedules

Use this comparison to choose the right 50/50 visitation schedule or joint custody schedule before generating a calendar. Each option can produce roughly equal parenting time, but the exchange load and child fit are different.

2-2-3 custody schedule

Best for
Toddlers, preschoolers, and children who need shorter gaps between homes.
Exchange frequency
High: several exchanges each week
Parent time split
Usually 50/50 over two weeks
Main advantage
Frequent contact and alternating long weekends
Main drawback
More packing, driving, and handoff opportunities.
Cons
Frequent exchanges can be too much if parents live far apart or conflict is high.

2-2-5-5 custody schedule

Best for
School-age children who benefit from fixed weekday routines.
Exchange frequency
Moderate
Parent time split
Usually 50/50 over two weeks
Main advantage
Same weekdays repeat for each parent
Main drawback
Five-day blocks may feel long for younger children.
Cons
Needs both homes ready for school-night responsibility.

5-2-2-5 custody schedule

Best for
Middle-school children or families that want longer school-week blocks.
Exchange frequency
Moderate to low
Parent time split
Usually 50/50 over two weeks
Main advantage
Longer blocks reduce constant transitions
Main drawback
Short two-day blocks can feel uneven if not planned well.
Cons
Requires clear supplies and activity systems in both homes.

3-4-4-3 custody schedule

Best for
Families wanting a middle ground between frequent contact and full weeks.
Exchange frequency
Moderate
Parent time split
Usually 50/50 over two weeks
Main advantage
No full week away from either parent
Main drawback
The pattern can look uneven unless parents track the two-week cycle.
Cons
Start-date confusion is common without a clear calendar.

Week-on/week-off custody schedule

Best for
Teenagers and older children who can handle full weeks in each home.
Exchange frequency
Low: usually one exchange per week
Parent time split
Usually 50/50 over two weeks
Main advantage
Simplest calendar and fewest exchanges
Main drawback
A full week away can be too long for younger children.
Cons
Requires both homes to support a full school week.

50/50 custody schedule examples

These mini examples show how common 50/50 calendars repeat. Open the full schedule guide for more detailed calendars, variations, and planning notes.

2-2-3 weekly example

Parent A

Mon-Tue

Parent B

Wed-Thu

Parent A

Fri-Sun

Week-on/week-off example

Parent A

Week 1

Parent B

Week 2

Repeats

One exchange per week

Printable summary

2-2-3 custody calendar

June 2026 preview starting 2026-06-19. Parent A: 7 days (58%). Parent B: 5 days (42%).

Use this summary for planning conversations. It is not legal advice.

More 50/50 custody schedule examples

Compare these examples when deciding whether your family needs frequent contact, fixed weekdays, or fewer exchanges.

2-2-3 weekly example

Parent A has Monday-Tuesday, Parent B has Wednesday-Thursday, and Parent A has Friday-Sunday. The next week flips.

Approx overnight split
About 50/50 over two weeks
Best use case
Younger children who need shorter gaps between homes.

2-2-5-5 two-week example

One parent keeps the same two weekdays, the other keeps the other two weekdays, and weekends alternate through five-day blocks.

Approx overnight split
About 50/50 over two weeks
Best use case
School-age children who need predictable weekday routines.

Week-on/week-off example

Parent A has one full week, Parent B has the next full week, and the pattern repeats with one weekly exchange.

Approx overnight split
About 50/50 over two weeks
Best use case
Teenagers and older children who can handle full weeks.

Looking for More 50/50 Custody Examples?

See how these schedules work for toddlers, school-age children, teenagers, holidays, work schedules, and different parenting situations.

Browse All 50/50 Schedule Examples

Practical insight

50/50 custody and child support

50/50 parenting time does not automatically mean no child support. Courts may still consider income, expenses, healthcare, childcare, and state-specific formulas.

The calendar still matters because it helps parents document the actual annual overnight count. Build the full schedule first, including holidays and school breaks, then estimate support with custody time included.

Support planning

50/50 custody and child support

50/50 parenting time does not automatically mean no child support. Courts may still consider income, expenses, healthcare, childcare, and state-specific formulas.

Use the 50/50 custody calendar as a planning record, not as a legal answer. If support is disputed, compare the parenting time totals with local rules or qualified professional guidance.

Annual overnightsParent incomeHealthcareChildcareState formulasSpecial expenses

Compare the schedule with support.

Parenting time may influence support discussions, but support can still depend on income, expenses, healthcare, childcare, and state-specific formulas.

Benefits of a 50/50 Custody Schedule: Examples, Calendar & Free Generator

  • • Both parents stay actively involved in ordinary weekday and weekend routines.
  • • Children can maintain strong relationships with both homes when logistics are stable.
  • • Parenting responsibilities are more balanced across school, bedtime, activities, and weekends.
  • • It can reduce the feeling that one parent is only the visitor.

Potential Drawbacks

  • • Requires communication, punctual exchanges, and clear shared expectations.
  • • Frequent exchanges can be stressful for children or parents.
  • • Harder when parents live far apart or school transportation is uneven.
  • • Not ideal for every child age, safety concern, work schedule, or conflict level.

Age fit

Best age groups for a 50/50 Custody Schedule: Examples, Calendar & Free Generator

Age does not decide a parenting schedule by itself, but it changes how children experience separations, exchanges, school routines, activities, and time away from each home.

Can work for many school-age children when parents live close enough to support school, activities, and transportation from both homes.

Older children and teenagers may prefer longer-block 50/50 options with fewer transitions.

Schedule variations

Common variations to consider

Most custody schedules need small adjustments for exchange location, school calendars, holidays, activity transportation, and the child’s comfort with transitions.

Use 2-2-3 for frequent contact and alternating weekends.

Use 2-2-5-5 or 5-2-2-5 for more stable weekdays and longer blocks.

Use week-on/week-off for older children who can handle full weeks in each home.

Next step

Related custody schedules and planning tools

Decision summary

Build the 50/50 calendar before choosing final wording

The strongest 50/50 custody schedule is the one that survives the real calendar: school mornings, weekends, exchanges, holidays, activities, and parent work schedules.

Generate the calendar, print it, calculate overnights, then use a parenting plan template to write the exact exchange and holiday rules.

FAQ

What is a 50/50 custody schedule? +

A 50/50 custody schedule is a parenting time calendar that gives each parent roughly equal time with the child. Common examples include 2-2-3, 2-2-5-5, 3-4-4-3, 5-2-2-5, and week-on/week-off.

The most common 50/50 custody schedules are 2-2-3, 2-2-5-5, and week-on/week-off. 2-2-3 is often used for younger children, 2-2-5-5 often fits school-age routines, and week-on/week-off is often simpler for older children and teenagers.

Yes. A 2-2-3 custody schedule usually balances to 50/50 over a two-week cycle because the parent with the three-day weekend in week one usually has the shorter weekday block in week two.

2-2-5-5 is often better for school-age children because the same weekdays repeat for each parent. 2-2-3 may be better for younger children who need shorter gaps between homes, as long as frequent exchanges are not stressful.

Toddlers often do better with shorter separations, so parents commonly compare 2-2-3 or 2-2-5-5 first. The right answer depends on distance, exchange stress, bedtime consistency, and the child’s developmental needs.

For school-age children, 2-2-5-5 is often easier because weekday responsibilities repeat. 5-2-2-5 and 3-4-4-3 can also work when both homes can support homework, transportation, activities, and supplies.

No. 50/50 parenting time does not automatically eliminate child support. Courts may still consider income, healthcare, childcare, expenses, and state-specific formulas.

50/50 custody usually means about 182-183 overnights per parent per year. Holidays, vacations, and school breaks can change the exact annual total.

Yes. Use the 50/50 custody schedule generator on this page to preview a calendar, print it, or download monthly and yearly PDF versions for planning.

You can use the calendar as an educational planning aid or discussion document, but it is not legal advice, a court order, or a substitute for attorney guidance. Check local requirements before filing or presenting any schedule.

It can be difficult, especially if the schedule requires frequent direct exchanges. High-conflict parents may need school-based exchanges, fewer handoffs, detailed written rules, or a different parenting time structure.

50/50 custody is harder when homes are far apart because school mornings, activities, transportation, and weekday routines may become stressful. Parents may need longer blocks, a custom schedule, or a different split such as 60/40.

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